2017
DOI: 10.1017/s0960777317000261
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Entangled Transitions: Eastern and Southern European Convergence or Alternative Europes? 1960s–2000s

Abstract: Ever since the fall of the Iron Curtain and the enthusiasm it inspired about the potential for European unity and democracy, it has become fashionable to see post-war European history in terms of convergence. Historians have researched the integration of the European continent into the global, in the context of the Cold War, decolonisation and economic globalisation. Internally, processes of convergence are seen to link the trajectories of nations on a continent where integration eventually trumped the divisio… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…If in the 1990s the Slovenian Parliament's main focus was state building, ensuring a break with the former regime, and moving toward Europe (changing laws and public holidays, holding open debates), the policies after the completed transition involved intense discovering, documenting, and marking the postwar killing sites-taking an active part not in ensuring an environment conducive to professional historical research and cultivating respect for its results, but instead revising the past for its own political gains. In the 1990s Slovenia at least partly understood itself as a bearer of the positive Communist legacy (e.g., the case of Slovenian economic transformation; Christiaens, Mark and Faradlo, 2017;Crowley and Stanojević 2011). However, after joining the European Union and electing its first right-wing government under the leadership of Janez Janša's Slovenian Democratic Party (Slovenska demokratska stranka) in 2004, the balance of the left-and right-wing understanding of the past, already firmly divided, tilted heavily toward the right.…”
Section: From An Internal Dilemma To An Externalized Memory Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If in the 1990s the Slovenian Parliament's main focus was state building, ensuring a break with the former regime, and moving toward Europe (changing laws and public holidays, holding open debates), the policies after the completed transition involved intense discovering, documenting, and marking the postwar killing sites-taking an active part not in ensuring an environment conducive to professional historical research and cultivating respect for its results, but instead revising the past for its own political gains. In the 1990s Slovenia at least partly understood itself as a bearer of the positive Communist legacy (e.g., the case of Slovenian economic transformation; Christiaens, Mark and Faradlo, 2017;Crowley and Stanojević 2011). However, after joining the European Union and electing its first right-wing government under the leadership of Janez Janša's Slovenian Democratic Party (Slovenska demokratska stranka) in 2004, the balance of the left-and right-wing understanding of the past, already firmly divided, tilted heavily toward the right.…”
Section: From An Internal Dilemma To An Externalized Memory Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…33 The rise of these references to the Third World among exiles and dissidents also became visible in the international campaigns that were staged on their behalf in the West, and which became focused on the idea of an anti-totalitarian struggle that equated Soviet communism with fascism and imperialism. 34 Pelikán and other Czechoslovak exiles could count on support networks in the West, which emerged in reaction to the normalization policy and trials in Czechoslovakia at the beginning of the 1970s. These committees were set up by left-wing activists, mostly situated within Trotskyite, Maoist, Eurocommunist, and social-democratic circles, and were often linked to campaigns on behalf of the Third World -especially on behalf of Vietnam and Chile.…”
Section: Eastern European Dissidents Discovering the Third Worldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…region in the aftermath of the fall of the dictatorships. 4 But this geographical and geopolitical definition of the area did not necessarily follow existing cultural, political and economic patterns. 5 Once the Eurozone crisis hit in the 2000s, these questions came back with renewed force but with even less conceptual clarity, as journalists and pundits frequently gestured towards vague notions of what they considered to be 'Southern Europe'.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%